Pyzówka Evening

Sunday 23 June 2013 | general

Pyzówka is a small village a few miles outside of Nowy Targ, the county seat, and in some ways, a world away from the rest of Poland. Relatively isolated, it still has the look and feel of a Polish village as I remember it from the 1990s.

To get there, you have to go up this road. Well, there are other ways of getting there, but I chose the back roads that I cycled so often when I lived here: narrow streets crowded with large house-barn complexes typical of this area, long stretches of road with only hayfields in forests in sight.

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When L and I arrived at G’s and D’s charming new house, the sun was still high and soon G had meat, meat, and cheese on the grill while all the ladies took a short trip to Nowy Targ.

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I couldn’t help but be a bit jealous. Not of the house so much, though it is beautiful. No, I was jealous of the views, of the sounds, even of the smells. A house set in the middle of pastures, bordered by forests and a stream. The odor of hay and pines and dung making an unmistakable odor that, in its muskiness and simplicity, provide a hint of what life was like before cars, the internet, cell phones, nightly news, and the thousand and one other distractions that we call modern life.

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After dinner, D, who is L’s godmother, chased the rest of us out of the house for a while so she could prepare some things for the next day — sounds very familiar — and so the five of us hiked up the hill to the cross. “Do krzyża.” It has a specific name; it has a specific history; we discussed it. I remember none of it. I only know that as we were approaching the village, as I was not sure I’d headed the right direction, I was terribly relieved to see the iron cross on the mountain: I knew we’d made it.

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“Does anybody live in that house?” I asked G as we passed by an old-style mountain home.

“No, nobody,” came the anticipated reply.

“It’s a shame — such a beautiful house.”

Yet unlike the Communist-style bus station in Nowy Targ, this structure has a fighting chance. Someone could remodel it, keeping the character but bringing it into the modern era. Still, such an endeavor is more costly that simply building a house.

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We continued on our way, pausing occasionally to talk to this individual or that, stopping to buy some homemade treats. And then M, G’s and D’s two-year-old son, saw the tractor. And when a two-year-old sees a tractor, the earth stops its rotation and all else loses significance. Others are welcome to play about on the tractor as long as the two-year-old sits in the driver’s seat.

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Further up the slope, items of interest for older boys.

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We finally reached the cross, climbed on the cross, looked up through the cross, and ate a few of the freshly baked cookies we’d just bought — masterpieces of Polish baking. Crisp to the point of being brittle, lightly sweet.

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By this time, the fog was settling in the valleys and the blue hues of dusk softened the views.

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We headed back down

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past the church and cemetery,

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and returned to the back patio. By nine thirty, the littlest trooper was in bed, D’s brother, K, arrived with a friend, and a long evening of chatting, discussing, and snacking ensued.

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Just a little slice of perfection in this six-week adventure.

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